U.S. white wheat growers cash in as China snaps up
supplies
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[March 12, 2021] By
Julie Ingwersen and Hallie Gu
CHICAGO/BEIJING (Reuters) - China is
scooping up supplies of U.S. white wheat to feed livestock, pushing
export forecasts for the grain usually used to make sponge cakes and
noodles to a 27-year-high.
The purchases are the latest disruption in commodities markets caused by
Chinese buying of grains and oilseeds during the coronavirus pandemic,
pushing prices of major commodity crops to multi-year highs.
China has booked more U.S. white wheat this year than any country
besides the Philippines, the top buyer of the grain. While U.S.
producers have long tried to woo the growing Chinese market for
confectionary foods made from white wheat flour, the recent purchases
reflect a need for animal feed, Chinese traders and analysts said.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Agriculture Department (USDA) raised its forecast
for exports of U.S. white wheat to 245 million bushels, the most since
1994, due to strong demand from China and South Korea.
Graphic: China on course for highest purchases of U.S. wheat in more
than 6 years -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/ygdpzgqgrvw/
USWheatexportstoChina.png
In a sign of the varied pace of global economic recoveries, USDA lowered
its export forecast for the most common U.S. wheat class, hard red
winter wheat, citing lower demand to "several Western Hemisphere
markets."
While white wheat is not typically fed to animals, high corn prices -
benchmark U.S. futures hit 7-1/2-year highs last month - made it a
viable alternative in China.
China is scouring the globe for feed grains as it rebuilds the world's
largest hog herd, which was ravaged by African swine fever.
“Most of the imported wheat is going to the feed sector as corn prices
are high and there is profit (to import)," said Li Hongchao, a senior
grains analyst with trade website Myagric.com.
China signed a trade deal with the United States in January 2020. More
recent trade tensions between China and Australia, which grows a
slightly different hard white wheat, have also sent China seeking
alternative wheat supplies.
Nine months into the 2020/21 wheat marketing year begun June 1, 2020,
China's purchases of all U.S. wheat classes are at a seven-year high of
2.9 million tonnes, according to USDA's weekly export sales data. White
wheat bookings represent about a third of the total, at 947,863 tonnes
as of March 4.
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A combine harvests wheat in Corn, Oklahoma, U.S., June 12, 2019.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
Chinese purchases of U.S. white wheat began ramping up in November, after
grinding to a near halt in 2018 and 2019 when Beijing and Washington were in the
thick of a trade war.
Prior to 2018, China had been building its U.S. white wheat purchases, booking
228,000 tonnes in 2016/17 and 307,000 tonnes in 2017/18. The U.S. wheat
industry, anticipating the growth of China's economy, has spent years
cultivating a relationship with China's flour millers and bakers.
"It's a growing middle class, and their interest (is) in diversifying their
diet," said Randy Fortenbery, an agricultural economist at Washington State
University.
Most U.S. white wheat is soft white wheat, grown in the Pacific Northwest and
beloved by bakers for its pale color and low gluten strength, ideal for cakes
and steamed breads.
'GOOD RUN-UP IN PRICES'
While the wheat has been cheaper than corn in China, where feed grains are in
high demand, it is earning U.S. farmers a premium. The booming export market for
white wheat has sent cash prices at the Portland, Oregon, export hub hovering
around $7.50 a bushel, up about $2 or 35% from July post harvest.
Idaho grower Cordell Kress says he sold about a third of his expected 2021 white
wheat harvest and has even pre-sold some of his 2022 crop.
"That is more than usual. But we have had a pretty good run-up in prices," said
Kress, who grows about 3,000 acres (12 square kilometers) of wheat each year in
southeast Idaho.
Graphic: U.S. wheat, corn prices push higher after strong buying from China -
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gfx/ce/yxmpjwkxxvr/
USWheatCornPrices.png
Even so, grain merchandisers and farmers do not expect much of a jump in U.S.
white wheat acres this spring, given strong prices for competing crops like
canola. While most of the U.S. white wheat crop was planted last autumn, before
the price rally, a smaller portion is seeded each spring.
"Lots of things go into crop selection besides price," said Kress. "I do what is
best for my farm and the soil, and typically that involves sticking to crop
rotations."
(Reporting by Julie Ingwersen and Hallie Gu; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and
Marguerita Choy)
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